74 N.C. 340 | N.C. | 1876
The following are substantially the facts agreed:
At Fall Term, 1874, a motion was made in the cause, to call (341) in an execution and set aside a levy. The motion was continued until Spring Term, 1875, when it was heard upon the following state of facts, as appeared from the proofs and affidavits:
The plaintiff had caused the defendant's homestead to be laid off and a levy to be made upon the excess. Soon after the homestead was laid off, the defendant applied to the township trustees to have it re-allotted, but subsequently withdrew the application and declared himself satisfied with the allotment. He then sold his homestead and recited in the deed that it was the homestead set apart to him by the appraisers.
He now makes the motion. It appears and the facts are, that one of the appraisers was related by marriage to the plaintiff, having married a cousin of the plaintiff's wife. This was known by the defendant at the time his homestead was allotted.
The appraisers did not set apart any personal property exemption. The defendant did not claim any, nor did he exhibit any personal property to the appraisers.
The motion was overruled by the court, and the defendant appealed. It is the declared policy of the State to secure every debtor a homestead who has one, although its effect should be to inflict upon the creditor the hardship of losing his debt. And therefore, the sheriff before levying, shall have a homestead valued and laid off; and if the debtor is dissatisfied he may apply to the township trustees, and have a *263 re-valuation and allotment. And the allotment of the trustees may be set aside upon petition as in other special proceedings "for fraud, complicity or other irregularity. Bat. Rev., Chap. 55, Secs. 2, 20, 24.
But after the debtor has had his rights passed upon and secured (342) by these liberal provisions, there is no policy which encourages captious or trifling objections, thrown in the way of the creditor's pursuing his remedies against the excess, over and above the homestead. Such seems to be the character of the objections in this case, and they place the defendant in the position of appearing to be ungrateful for the favors shown him; insensible to the resulting hardship upon the plaintiff, and disposed to add to it by expensive and vexatious delays.
The defendant's homestead was laid off by the sheriff. He applied to the trustees for a re-allotment. He withdrew that application. Expressed himself satisfied with the first allotment, and sold his homestead so allotted. He now seeks to stop the creditor's execution against the excess and have a re-allotment upon the ground that one of the sheriff's appraisers was the husband of a cousin of the plaintiff's wife, a fact which was known to defendant at the time, and not objected to; nor is it alleged that there was any "fraud or complicity or other irregularity."
This objection cannot avail the defendant for three reasons: (1) first, it was not made in apt time to the sheriff; (2) secondly, if not allowed by the sheriff it ought to have been taken advantage of in an application to the township trustees, as provided for in section 20; (3) thirdly, if not allowed by the trustees, then it ought to have been taken advantage of by a "petition, as in other special proceedings," under section 24.
There is no error. This will be certified.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
(343)